NHL hires ex-enforcer George Parros to run player safety

FILE – In this March 5, 2014, file photo, Montreal Canadiens right wing George Parros (15) fights with Anaheim Ducks right wing Tim Jackman (18) during the first period of an NHL hockey game, in Anaheim, Calif. The NHL has tabbed former enforcer George Parros to run its department of player safety. Commissioner Gary Bettman announced Parros’ appointment to senior vice president of player safety on Thursday, Sept. 7, 2017. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu, File)(Photo: The Associated Press)

NEW YORK (AP) — George Parros, the bushy-mustachioed Princeton man who spent almost a decade as an NHL enforcer, is now in charge of the league’s player safety department.

After a career in which he fought 159 times and racked up 1,127 penalty minutes, Parros believes there’s one major reason he’ll succeed as the new vice president of player safety.

“What uniquely positions me for the job is that I played the game as physically as anybody and I never once was fined or suspended,” Parros said Thursday at the NHL office. “I know where that line is. I know how to protect my guys or intimidate but not injure or hurt.”

He is succeeding Stephane Quintal, who is pursuing other opportunities in hockey but staying on this season to assist with the transition.

Parros intends to be stricter on slashing and what he calls “nonhockey plays.” Recent high-sticking incidents involving Gustav Nyquist and Duncan Keith that drew six-game suspensions would likely be harsher under Parros.

Parros says the department does not need to make a major shake-up but to adjust in specific areas.

“If you can tell that something was done on purpose and it has nothing to do with the play … whether it’s stick work into a guy’s face or something like that, these nonhockey types of plays, these major incidents that don’t happen too often, but I’d like to come down harder on those,” Parros said.

The league plans to more closely monitor certain kinds of slashing, namely those to players’ hands that cause injury. Sidney Crosby severed Marc Methot’s finger and Eric Staal broke Johnny Gaudreau’s finger with slashes last season.

“If they seem to be more intentful or directed towards the fingers and hands with greater force, we’re going to be looking to do something: fines, suspensions, whatever it might be,” Parros said. “We’re going to try and change player behavior and we’re very well aware that you can’t get every slash and it’s…